Tuesday Night Party Club #20

Gallery: Morgo the Mighty

Morgo the Mighty was a pulp serial by Sean O’Larkin. You can find my essay about the novel (and download it to read) at that link. The story is fun but not a classic. It reads like the author had read enough fantasy pulp adventures to know the formula but wasn’t in love with the genre enough to go crazy. I look at the story as a not bad first draft that needs a more imaginative rewrite. Doing that rewrite is one of my many “someday” projects.

In the meantime I’ve done a few illustrations inspired by the book. Most of these are visuals for The Surrilana Depths, my imagined  “second draft”. Someday. Someday.

Story Seed #43
The New Hollow Earth

Morgo the Mighty was set in a gigantic cave system under the Himalayas. It’s part of the Hollow Earth genre of pulp fantasy. The most famous examples are probably Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne and At the Earth’s Core by Edgar Rice Burroughs. Most examples of subterranean adventure stories follow closer to Verne’s example than Burroughs’ – they take place in caverns and tunnels. That makes sense. The earth is riddled with caverns and humans (and other critters) are good at making tunnels. Caverns and tunnels are more plausible than an actual Hollow Earth. Hell, even when Burroughs wrote At the Earth’s Core the idea of a vast, inhabitable inner Earth was considered a fantasy. That didn’t stop Burroughs from writing seven novels set in Pellucidar.

The idea of Hollow Earth filled with prehistoric survivors, lost civilizations and other weird menaces is free for anyone to use. The first two Pellucidar novels are in public domain so one could set a story there. So far as I know, existing Hollow Earth fiction and games set their stories no later than WW2. It’s easier to believe in an impossible place when the stories are period pieces. Technology was less advanced. The world seemed to have so much undiscovered space.

Imagine someone discovering the Hollow Earth in 2020. I’m less interested in how such a place could exist (Alternate dimensions? Atlantean construct? Elder Thing project? Extraterrestrial pocket universe? Intelligent dinosaur asteroid survival strategy?) than in how modern humanity would react to finding an entire world beneath their feet. Suddenly there’s a world of untapped resources available that doesn’t require space travel to reach.

Is the Hollow Earth inhabited by intelligent creatures? If not, we’re likely to have Surface nations competing for territory and resources. If there are intelligent but low tech Hollow societies they’re going to be faced with the same challenges that indigenous Surface people have dealt with for hundreds of years.

What if the Hollow Earth already has a materialist civilization using up its resources? In that case the Hollows might be looking at our surface world as a source of new materials. And workers. Slaves. Consumers.

Or perhaps the Hollows have figured out a workable civilization and contact with the Surfaces threatens to destabilize it. Or … what if discovering that our planet was inhabited by a workable, sustainable civilization caused us to (further) destabilize ours?

Does the Hollow Earth have dinosaurs? Has time stopped there? Has life followed a different evolutionary path? The Hollow Earth is empty. How would you fill it?

Recommendation

Field Notes is a newsletter by Christopher Brown. He writes about encounters with animals and nature in urban spaces. I’m fascinated by the way the rest of the inhabitants of the environment adapt to the sprawl of the human species. I consider human civilization as natural as termite mounds or ant colonies. Human civilization is toxic to much of the rest of environment because we’re better at creating it than we are at creating limitations for it. Brown describes his explorations and observations of the “wild” surviving in “civilization”.

Local News

I’ve been off work since Friday. I’m on one of my annual vacations. I’m primarily focusing on getting art done. I hadn’t made plans to travel anywhere so the shutdown hasn’t created any disappointment. I had thought about taking a road trip to see friends but I hadn’t done more than thought about it.

I had been enthusiastic about rearranging my studio so my wife could have a closer workspace but that was weeks ago. I managed some spring cleaning then, did some organizing and got rid of some things but the longer the shutdown lasts the less energy I’ve got for big changes. That feels weird because we’re less affected by the shutdown than most.

I enjoy my own company. The creative work I do is mostly a solo thing. I need a quiet space when I write. My artwork is all my own work, no inkers or colorists. But I learned a long time ago that I need to physically interact with people in order to maintain sanity and a good mood. I need to see friends. I need to be in the same physical space and to touch them. Handshakes. Hugs. High fives. Basic monkey interactions. Phone calls, emails and Facebook are, for me, just gap fillers between the real moments. The longer real moments stay unavailable the less I’m interested in phone calls, emails and Facebook, the more an isolation loop forms.

I understand part of why folks are protesting the shutdown. It’s not really haircuts or going to bars. It’s isolation. Being alone for too long can be terrifying. Have you listened to your thoughts. Culture has clogged your thinking with so much horrible crap. The best way to get it out is to interact with another person, in person. I’m lucky. I’m friends with the monsters in my head. I don’t think my thoughts are orders or that unmet desires are signs of personal failure. But, damn, I get sick of listening to my thoughts.

Hmmm. I hadn’t planned to sign off on a downer note. I do know that this is just how I’m feeling as I’m writing this. The only constant in the world is change. I’m likely to feel different in a couple of hours. So, however, you’re managing yourself in these times, I do wish you well. We live in interesting times. The best way to navigate them is by being interested and interesting.

Mighty Morgo versus the Chicken Fiend – Color

chickenfiendcolor

Morgo the Mighty was clearly inspired by both Tarzan and At the Earth’s Core. It features a feral white man who is the master of his jungle environment and that jungle environment is located in caverns beneath the earth. There are monstrous creatures that he must battle to survive.

Contrary to online descriptions of the novel (and illustrations that accompanied it when it was serialized in The Popular Magazine) there are no dinosaurs or other prehistoric creatures in Surrilana. The beasts in the caverns are evolved (and often gigantic) rodents, bats, insects and birds. It’s a more realistic scenario than a land somehow populated by dinosaurs. I’m not saying it’s a better scenario. I love dinosaurs.

Birds are the descendants of the dinosaurs. So, perhaps, the chicken fiends of Surrilana can be considered dinosaur stand-ins.

 

Mighty Morgo versus the Chicken Fiend – Black and White

chickenfiendbw

In Chapter 15 of the pulp serial Morgo the Mighty, Morgo and Nurri Kala must face .. the Chicken Fiends! “The Chicken Fiends” is, in fact, the title of the chapter. Apparently chickens were considered to be more fearful beasts back in 1930. The creatures rule over one of the cavern environments in Surrilana, an underground realm beneath the Himalayas. I know a giant flesh eating chicken would actually be pretty terrifying but, as a city boy here in the 21st century, it’s hard for me to summon up any nervous emotions about chickens.

Morgo kills them dead.